| 释义 | 
		Definition of partial in English: partialadjective ˈpɑːʃ(ə)lˈpɑrʃəl 1Existing only in part; incomplete.  a question to which we have only partial answers  Example sentencesExamples -  This is a very partial list, restricted to US sins and crimes in the Western Hemisphere.
 -  A partial answer to this is that mere things only present themselves to mere beholding, but mere beholding is only a deficient mode of concern or engagement.
 -  Often premature and unconvincing generalisations are made from rather more limited and partial changes.
 -  For those of us who were expecting the Iraqi army to put up more resistance to the coalition this may provide a partial answer to why they did not.
 -  I think that a partial answer to your question is that we're in a much more modern secular period here, post-1945.
 -  I suspect that this may be a partial answer, but the major problem is that there is too much fishing available to match anglers these days.
 -  I have a vague sense that dramaturgs may be a partial answer to the director capture problem, but I don't know enough about theatre to say.
 -  In such cases, the children sometimes got partial answers or intuited something of their situations on their own.
 -  A partial answer to the other question is that some basic international requirements for a fair election are missing in Florida.
 -  One partial answer is a prediction from the years before the Oslo peace process collapsed.
 -  Rummaging around the internet has provided a partial answer.
 -  Buildings partially vacated may also qualify for a partial reduction in payments.
 -  It should be thought of as a partial or incomplete dislocation.
 -  Control of the marriage of a female heiress by the cadet branches of the chiefly house, and the office of tutor or guardian within the clan, were partial answers.
 -  If you want to know why I am so hostile to religion, there are partial answers here and here.
 -  The project essentially entailed a partial renewal of the existing line with some shortcut additions.
 -  With a few cues, reminders or partial fragments in mind, we can select, interpret, and integrate one thing with another so as to make use of what we learn and remember.
 -  Finding at least partial answers to questions about suffering and death brings satisfaction, if not certainty.
 -  Quantitative measurement is necessarily, by its very nature, partial and incomplete.
 -  This is a partial answer, satisfactory to explain my own suffering.
 
  Synonyms incomplete, limited, qualified, restricted, imperfect, fragmentary, unfinished 2Favouring one side in a dispute above the other; biased.  the paper gave a distorted and very partial view of the situation  Example sentencesExamples -  As partial academics they are unable to sponsor, promote or foster academic excellence.
 -  Such a perspective would be as partial as the view that the American Revolution was a fight between natives and aliens.
 -  Thus the written history of slavery is inevitably partial and one-sided.
 -  Total war may describe certain isolated and uncharacteristic aspects of the Civil War but is at most a partial view.
 -  I'm not an expert and I can't say for sure, but I think the UN weapons inspectors took a partial view of biological warfare.
 -  It's about separating yourself and your ideas from everyone else's partial biases.
 -  He said it was evident in the partial views of legislators in the House of Representatives.
 -  Death doesn't seem to have any favourites; only humans have a partial view.
 -  The original hawk-dove model predicted partial preferences for aggressiveness.
 -  How can those who articulate the green case possibly be comfortable with such a curiously unbalanced mix of myths and beliefs, such a partial view of the world?
 -  Published within one year of the Iraq War, the book offers only a partial view of the international dimension of the crisis.
 -  The difficulty, as ever, is that it inevitably encompasses a very partial and contradictory world view.
 
  Synonyms biased, prejudiced, partisan, one-sided, slanted, skewed, coloured, interested, parti pris, discriminatory, preferential, jaundiced unjust, unfair, inequitable, unbalanced 3partial toHaving a liking for.  you know I'm partial to bacon and eggs  Example sentencesExamples -  He'd always been more partial to Eliana, but Evangeline was his daughter nonetheless.
 -  Unfortunately for me I'm very partial to cream buns and meat pies.
 -  You know, I'm very partial to what you are saying here.
 -  Today's side is also partial to knockout competition.
 -  The wife of a colleague was known to be partial to bacon and banana.
 -  I could afford the best wine by then, and I'd had become very partial to bacon every morning.
 -  On another note, I have always been more partial to his poetry than his criticism.
 -  Certainly, that touring party was more than partial to a peculiarly Kiwi version of bacon and egg pie.
 -  But since Sophia is partial to dark colours herself, he'll probably never know.
 -  I've been especially partial to their playing of Mozart.
 
  Synonyms like, love, enjoy, have a liking for, be fond of, be keen on, have a fondness for, have a weakness for, have a soft spot for, have a taste for, be taken with, care for, have a predilection/proclivity/penchant for, be enamoured of informal adore, be mad about/on, have a thing about, be crazy about, be potty about, be nutty about North American informal cotton to, be nutso over/about Australian/New Zealand informal be shook on 
 noun ˈpɑːʃ(ə)lˈpɑrʃəl Music A component of a musical sound; an overtone or harmonic.  strings would like to oscillate as closely as possible to harmonic partials  Example sentencesExamples -  Fortunately, Väisänen salvages the track by piling up shimmering partials over the depths-of-the-ocean drone before the track gently recedes into the distance.
 -  At once the problem arises that the human voice is composed of many tones: the fundamental tone and a series of other tones called upper harmonics or partials.
 -  In stringed instruments, additional strings of wire that vibrate in sympathy with a unison note or one of its partials, bowed or plucked on the main strings, adding a shimmer to the sound.
 -  Bass players in these bands often play with picks, which also emphasizes higher partials.
 -  One unusual aspect of this music is that the rich upper partials of the voices bring out the simple harmonies of the hymns in a way not normally heard.
 
 
 Origin   Late Middle English (in sense 2 of the adjective): from Old French parcial (sense 2 of the adjective), French partiel (sense 1 of the adjective), from late Latin partialis, from pars, part- 'part'. Rhymes   court-martial, impartial, marshal, martial    Definition of partial in US English: partialadjectiveˈpärSHəlˈpɑrʃəl 1Existing only in part; incomplete.  a question to which we have only partial answers  Example sentencesExamples -  This is a partial answer, satisfactory to explain my own suffering.
 -  Control of the marriage of a female heiress by the cadet branches of the chiefly house, and the office of tutor or guardian within the clan, were partial answers.
 -  Rummaging around the internet has provided a partial answer.
 -  This is a very partial list, restricted to US sins and crimes in the Western Hemisphere.
 -  With a few cues, reminders or partial fragments in mind, we can select, interpret, and integrate one thing with another so as to make use of what we learn and remember.
 -  I have a vague sense that dramaturgs may be a partial answer to the director capture problem, but I don't know enough about theatre to say.
 -  One partial answer is a prediction from the years before the Oslo peace process collapsed.
 -  Buildings partially vacated may also qualify for a partial reduction in payments.
 -  Finding at least partial answers to questions about suffering and death brings satisfaction, if not certainty.
 -  I think that a partial answer to your question is that we're in a much more modern secular period here, post-1945.
 -  Quantitative measurement is necessarily, by its very nature, partial and incomplete.
 -  For those of us who were expecting the Iraqi army to put up more resistance to the coalition this may provide a partial answer to why they did not.
 -  In such cases, the children sometimes got partial answers or intuited something of their situations on their own.
 -  Often premature and unconvincing generalisations are made from rather more limited and partial changes.
 -  I suspect that this may be a partial answer, but the major problem is that there is too much fishing available to match anglers these days.
 -  A partial answer to this is that mere things only present themselves to mere beholding, but mere beholding is only a deficient mode of concern or engagement.
 -  The project essentially entailed a partial renewal of the existing line with some shortcut additions.
 -  It should be thought of as a partial or incomplete dislocation.
 -  If you want to know why I am so hostile to religion, there are partial answers here and here.
 -  A partial answer to the other question is that some basic international requirements for a fair election are missing in Florida.
 
  Synonyms incomplete, limited, qualified, restricted, imperfect, fragmentary, unfinished 2Favoring one side in a dispute above the other; biased.  the paper gave a distorted and very partial view of the situation  Example sentencesExamples -  I'm not an expert and I can't say for sure, but I think the UN weapons inspectors took a partial view of biological warfare.
 -  Thus the written history of slavery is inevitably partial and one-sided.
 -  He said it was evident in the partial views of legislators in the House of Representatives.
 -  Total war may describe certain isolated and uncharacteristic aspects of the Civil War but is at most a partial view.
 -  Published within one year of the Iraq War, the book offers only a partial view of the international dimension of the crisis.
 -  How can those who articulate the green case possibly be comfortable with such a curiously unbalanced mix of myths and beliefs, such a partial view of the world?
 -  The original hawk-dove model predicted partial preferences for aggressiveness.
 -  It's about separating yourself and your ideas from everyone else's partial biases.
 -  The difficulty, as ever, is that it inevitably encompasses a very partial and contradictory world view.
 -  As partial academics they are unable to sponsor, promote or foster academic excellence.
 -  Such a perspective would be as partial as the view that the American Revolution was a fight between natives and aliens.
 -  Death doesn't seem to have any favourites; only humans have a partial view.
 
  Synonyms biased, prejudiced, partisan, one-sided, slanted, skewed, coloured, interested, parti pris, discriminatory, preferential, jaundiced 3partial topredicative Having a liking for.  you know I'm partial to bacon and eggs  Example sentencesExamples -  Today's side is also partial to knockout competition.
 -  I've been especially partial to their playing of Mozart.
 -  Unfortunately for me I'm very partial to cream buns and meat pies.
 -  But since Sophia is partial to dark colours herself, he'll probably never know.
 -  You know, I'm very partial to what you are saying here.
 -  I could afford the best wine by then, and I'd had become very partial to bacon every morning.
 -  Certainly, that touring party was more than partial to a peculiarly Kiwi version of bacon and egg pie.
 -  On another note, I have always been more partial to his poetry than his criticism.
 -  He'd always been more partial to Eliana, but Evangeline was his daughter nonetheless.
 -  The wife of a colleague was known to be partial to bacon and banana.
 
  Synonyms like, love, enjoy, have a liking for, be fond of, be keen on, have a fondness for, have a weakness for, have a soft spot for, have a taste for, be taken with, care for, have a penchant for, have a predilection for, have a proclivity for, be enamoured of 
 nounˈpärSHəlˈpɑrʃəl Music A component of a musical sound; an overtone or harmonic.  the upper partials of the string  Example sentencesExamples -  In stringed instruments, additional strings of wire that vibrate in sympathy with a unison note or one of its partials, bowed or plucked on the main strings, adding a shimmer to the sound.
 -  Bass players in these bands often play with picks, which also emphasizes higher partials.
 -  At once the problem arises that the human voice is composed of many tones: the fundamental tone and a series of other tones called upper harmonics or partials.
 -  Fortunately, Väisänen salvages the track by piling up shimmering partials over the depths-of-the-ocean drone before the track gently recedes into the distance.
 -  One unusual aspect of this music is that the rich upper partials of the voices bring out the simple harmonies of the hymns in a way not normally heard.
 
 
 Origin   Late Middle English (in partial (sense 2 of the adjective)): from Old French parcial ( partial (sense 2 of the adjective)), French partiel ( partial (sense 1 of the adjective)), from late Latin partialis, from pars, part- ‘part’.     |